Tonight in Austin Improv: Saturday, September 10
Posted: September 10th, 2016, 10:07 am
COLDTOWNE THEATER:
10:00 am - What's the Story, Steve? - $Pay what you want
7:00 - The Saturday Evening Harold, feat. Bad Font and Taco Skabana - $7
8:30 - Title Fine: We Got Game - $10
10:00 - Midnight Society - $8
11:30 - Nice Astronaut presents Improv Roulette - $5
___
THE HIDEOUT THEATRE:
6:00 - Maestro RAW - $10
8:00 - I'll Take the Physical Challenge - $15
10:00 - Maestro - $12
10:30 - Off Script (stand-up) - $10
___
THE INSTITUTION THEATER:
8:00 - Over the Lege, feat. That Racket! (variety) - $10
8:00 - Saturday Night Tightrope - $5
10:00 - Highly Suggestible - $5
___
THE NEW MOVEMENT THEATER:
7:30 - Part II - $5
10:30 - The Megaphone Show - $5
___
FACT OF THE DAY: “Macaroni” was an British adjective coined in the 1760s to describe a young aristocrat who had returned from the customary “Grand Tour” of Europe with a heightened sense of culture—including a love for the Italian pasta. The song “Yankee Doodle Dandy” describes a man who “stuck a feather in his cap and called it macaroni”—that is, put in a minimum of effort and considered himself fashionable.
10:00 am - What's the Story, Steve? - $Pay what you want
7:00 - The Saturday Evening Harold, feat. Bad Font and Taco Skabana - $7
8:30 - Title Fine: We Got Game - $10
10:00 - Midnight Society - $8
11:30 - Nice Astronaut presents Improv Roulette - $5
___
THE HIDEOUT THEATRE:
6:00 - Maestro RAW - $10
8:00 - I'll Take the Physical Challenge - $15
10:00 - Maestro - $12
10:30 - Off Script (stand-up) - $10
___
THE INSTITUTION THEATER:
8:00 - Over the Lege, feat. That Racket! (variety) - $10
8:00 - Saturday Night Tightrope - $5
10:00 - Highly Suggestible - $5
___
THE NEW MOVEMENT THEATER:
7:30 - Part II - $5
10:30 - The Megaphone Show - $5
___
FACT OF THE DAY: “Macaroni” was an British adjective coined in the 1760s to describe a young aristocrat who had returned from the customary “Grand Tour” of Europe with a heightened sense of culture—including a love for the Italian pasta. The song “Yankee Doodle Dandy” describes a man who “stuck a feather in his cap and called it macaroni”—that is, put in a minimum of effort and considered himself fashionable.